There's no crying over spilled milk, but nobody ever said anything about lost cereal.
Cascadian Farm, an organic foods brand of General Mills Inc., in the midst of developing a new cereal around a grain called Kernza, last fall hit a risk known by many farmers: crop failure. The company scaled back a plan for a product rollout.
"Many tears were shed in my office," said Maria Carolina Comings, marketing director for Cascadian Farm. "It's a crazy ambitious goal to try and commercialize this."
Kernza is an intermediate wheatgrass with ancient origins that many believe holds huge potential for environmental and economic benefits. Kernza is a perennial with a massive root system that stays in the ground year-round. Wheat, its cousin, is an annual with smaller roots.
Early research, including some conducted by the University of Minnesota, suggests Kernza can reduce soil erosion, hold in more carbon and minimize nitrogen inputs and groundwater seepage.
The small harvest General Mills salvaged from its 2018 Kernza crop has been milled and turned into 6,000 boxes of Honey Toasted Kernza Cereal.
The company announced Wednesday that it will offer the limited run to consumers who make a donation of at least $25 to the Land Institute's Kernza project.
The Land Institute, a nonprofit agricultural research organization, has been breeding the wild wheatgrass for 15 years, resulting in the domesticated variety called Kernza, a word it trademarked. The problem is no one has figured out how to grow it on a large scale.